Xpost: Need help deciding!
I know I can't get this surgery unless I am 100% sure that I want to. But how am I supposed to be 100% when I have this addiction to food? I guess it depends on how committed I am to quitting the addiction and making a change in my life, right? Doesn't the surgery MAKE a person change? For me, I cannot deal with a lot of pain so I know I would be extremely cautious on what I ate. So for me, it would be a kick in the butt in the right direction, right?
Then, on the other hand, I keep thinking I can do this on my own. That I can try doing a diet and stick to it... when in reality, deep down inside, I know I can't! The longest I have been successful with any kind of weight-loss was when I worked out for 2 hours a day, but I wasn't able to keep up that routine. Though it lasted about 1-2 years I eventually got so bored of it I just phased out and then quit.
So, tell me, if this surgery is a "tool" and people/doctors/surgeons all say you HAVE to change your behaviors and the diet after you get surgery... then why have the surgery at all? Why get cut up for life? Why not just change now your diet/lifestyle/behaviors and have a normal stomach?
Again, please please please don't think I am trying to flame anyone... I am just having these thoughts and concerns and would like to hear from other people going through the same thing.
Thank you for your support!
Joanne
Well, I also didn't want to be cut up for life. I had the lap band, which IS reversible, if for some reason I decided I didn't want it anymore. I can't ever imagine that happening.
If we could change our eating habits alone, we would all be thin. The band forces you to eat smaller portions. I guess with RNY you also have to eat smaller portions, but you are not absorbing all of your nutrients.
Do your research. Check out all the stuff on the net about every WLS procedure and then make an informed decision.
Prior to surgery I was always hungry and never satisified... I did not know what it meant to be full, only stuffed from eating. I now can eat and be satisified from food... or eat and feel full, without that I could never stick to any sort of diet plan because I felt deprived and miserable. I know some of the behavior was on the mental side, but it was contributed to by the physical side... by the surgeon 'fixing' that it allowed me to get control over the mental.
Hopefully that makes sense.. for me the key was having my hunger 'fixed'... I rarely feel hungry now, just if I wait too long to eat... I feel now I can finally enjoy eating for the first time because I am eating to live, not living to eat.
First visit to surgeon - 288 ~ bmi 45.1
2 week pre-op 252 ~ bmi 39.5
Total lost - 153 Since surgery - 117!
Goal weight - 155 (mine) 180 (surgeons)
Current weight - 135 (2020 I lost 10lbs due to dedicating myself to working out more and being in better shape)
1/14/2025 still maintaining 135 :-)
Extended TT, lipo, fat injections - 11/2011
BA/BL/Arm Lift - 7/2014
Scar revision on arms - 3/2015
HALO laser on arms/neck 9/2016
Thigh Lift 10/2020
Thigh Lift revision 10/2021
I don't usually answer these but I'll put in my opinion.
If you are thinking that surgery is your last option, if you believe that another yo-yo diet is going to be even more dangerous for you, if you are not ready to die of obesity...Then surgery is for you. Any surgery you choose is going to be major surgery. Not to be taken lightly.
I didnt' want to live with hardware inside of me and my insurance will not pay to have it removed once it's put in place. That was the ONLY reason that I decided against the band but it's a very personal choice. You first have to decide that another diet isn't going to work first.
Then you find a surgeon that you trust with your life and see what he recommends. Or ask your PCP and see what they recommend. They know you best.
Before Surgery: 214
Highest Weight: 240
Now: 125.6
Goal: 130
Surgery gave me the opportunity to "diet" (meaning the post WLS eating plan) without the physcial sensation of hunger. This was enough to keep me on trac****il success formed a feedback loop, first 50 pounds, then 100, then 150. Then the energy starts building and running and skiing sound like fun!
Second, surgery is a diet you can't quit. I have a new saying: "I can have my cake and not eat it too" meaning some foods (which I should not eat anyway) will cause me to vomit. In terms of volume, a Happy Meal is about my meal size...to try a super size double quarter pounder meal now would be trip to the ER. So in a way, surgery gives me a kick in the nuts (as a reminder) every time I fall off the proverbial wagon.
And, in the end, there is a wagon to fall off. I am a food addict and even tho I am never hungry I always want to eat. I am now blessed with an understanding of how physcial hunger is different than simply wanting to eat. I need to use my brain to stay on track which is why I often say "a lot of this job is mental.'
My point is...............don't NOT do what will probably be the best gift you can give yourself out of fear. If you're motivated and you work the tool.....you WILL lose the weight. But only you can decide if you're really ready to do this. IT's a total life change. Pros and cons just like anything else in life. Good luck...